The Normative World of Memes: Political Communication Strategies in the United States and Ecuador
Abstract:
The media convergence model presents an environment in which everyone produces information without intermediates or filters. A subsequent insight shows that users (prosumers)—gathered in networked communities—also shape messages’ flow. Social media play a substantial role. This information is loaded with public values and ideologies that shape a normative world: social media has become a fundamental platform where users interact and promote public values. Memetics facilitates this phenomenon. Memes have three main characteristics:(1) Diffuse at the micro-level but shape the macrostructure of society;(2) Are based on popular culture;(3) Travel through competition and selection. In this context, this paper examines how citizens from Ecuador and the United States reappropriate memes during a public discussion? The investigation is based on multimodal analysis and compares the most popular memes among the United States and Ecuador produced during the candidate debate (Trump vs. Biden [2020] and Lasso vs. Arauz [2021]). The findings suggest that, during a public discussion, it is common to use humor based on popular culture to question authority. Furthermore, a message becomes a meme when it evidences the gap between reality and expectations (normativity). Normativity depends on the context: Americans complain about the expectations of a debate; Ecuadorians, about discourtesy and violence.
Año de publicación:
2022
Keywords:
Fuente:
Tipo de documento:
Other
Estado:
Acceso abierto
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Comunicación
- Comunicación
Áreas temáticas:
- Interacción social
- Relaciones internacionales
- Procesos sociales